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    Russian recruits expected to last only 30 minutes on the frontline

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    By Latest News Editor on June 29, 2026 World News
    Russian recruits expected to last only 30 minutes on the frontline
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    Get you up to speed: Russian recruits expected to survive for just ’30 minutes’ on frontline | News World

    Reports indicate that Russian conscripts face rapid casualties, with claims that recruits may be killed or seriously injured within minutes of reaching the battlefield. The situation highlights the ongoing toll of military operations involving Russian forces engaged in the conflict, resulting in over 30,000 Russian soldier fatalities this year.

    Russian state media reported that approximately 420,000 individuals have signed one-year contracts for military service. Experts indicate that the rapid casualties among recruits are linked to advanced military technologies affecting battlefield dynamics, alongside a significant shortage of fuel creating logistical challenges.

    Senior officials, including President Vladimir Putin, have acknowledged “problems” caused by fuel shortages and are considering potential measures such as a ban on diesel exports. As public discontent grows, recent commentary from business leaders highlights a “profound disappointment” with Putin’s leadership, indicating a shifting mood among supporters.

    What remains unclear — The specific measures Putin is considering to address fuel shortages and supply issues have not been detailed.

    Russian recruits expected to last only 30 minutes on the frontline

    Russian recruits expected to last only 30 minutes on the frontline
    Russian conscripts can expect to die within half an hour of arriving on the battlefield, according to reports (Picture: Reuters)

    Half a million casualties, fuel shortages and key infrastructure destroyed; Putin’s war machine continues to take its toll in Russia.

    It has now been more than 50 months since the Russian president launched his ‘special military operation’ – a war which has now outlasted the First World War and dragged on longer than Russia’s conflict against Nazi Germany.

    Now, new reports suggest that Russian soldiers are being butchered not within days or hours, but within minutes of going to war.

    In fact, Russian recruits can expect to last barely half an hour upon arriving on the frontline, an expert has said.

    Peter Frankopan, a professor of global history at Oxford University, said that eight Russians are being either killed or seriously injured for every Ukrainian.

    More than 30,000 Russian soldiers have lost their lives this year.

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    So little wonder that Putin is having to entice new recruits with bonuses to the tune of £60,000 as well as debt relief up to £105,000.

    Russian conscripts called up for military service sit in a bus as they depart for garrisons, in Bataysk in the Rostov region, Russia April 10, 2026. REUTERS/Sergey Pivovarov
    Recruits are being heavily incentivised to sign up, but are dying within weeks of entering the training ground (Picture: Reuters)

    Some 420,000 were reported by state media to have taken up one-year-long contracts.

    However, as Professor Frankopan explains, Russia’s accelerating rate of casualties is very much down to new military technology and tactics.

    In a column for Foreign Policy, he argues that recruits are being killed within 20 minutes of setting foot on the battlefield.

    According to Russian military bloggers, an average fighter can expect to last somewhere between 10 days and three weeks from arriving at a training ground.

    Drones have become a primary weapon, with Ukrainian forces launching them against not just military targets but key oil infrastructure as well.

    Addressing the shortage of petrol at pumps, Putin conceded to senior officials ‘problems’ had been caused by supply issues and said he was considering measures such as a ban on diesel exports.

    MOSCOW, RUSSIA - JUNE 18: Black smoke rises from the refinery where a fire broke out following a strike as firefighting efforts continue in Moscow, Russia on June 18, 2026. The Moscow Oil Refinery has reportedly been damaged again in an attack by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in Russia. Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin said in a statement on social media that air defense systems continue to repel an intense UAV attack targeting the city. Noting that some UAVs reached the Moscow Oil Refinery, Sobyanin stated that necessary measures have been taken to address the consequences of the attack. (Photo by Sefa Karacan/Anadolu via Getty Images)
    Ukrainian forces have continued to target Russian oil refineries in a bid to disrupt fuel supplies (Picture: Anadolu)

    And as the impact of the war is felt deeper into Russia and more subtlely by consumers, the mood has begun to turn against Putin.

    Last month, business leaders conceded that there was ‘profound disappointment’ in the dictator’s leadership.

    One told the Guardian there was a sense a ‘growing catastrophe is looming’ amid concern over ‘utterly senseless, self-destructive decisions’ being made.

    They said: ‘People who once defended Putin no longer do. Any sense of a future has disappeared.’

    Despite frequently alluding to historical Russian figures such as Peter the Great, Putin actually resembles Tsar Nicholas II, who was ousted in 1917 following the First World War, says Professor Frankopan.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a cabinet meeting via videoconference at the Kremlin in Moscow, Tuesday, June 23, 2026. (Gavriil Grigorov/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)
    Professor of global history Peter Frankopan says Putin will likely ‘pull the heads of others under the water’ to try to cling to power (Picture: Gavriil Grigorov/Pool Sputnik Kr)

    The president has instead made many missteps including ‘micromanaging the war, disappearing for long spells, and then making bizarre public appearances’, he said.

    He added that Putin would likely try to cling on to power by any means and even ‘pull the heads of others under the water’ to stay on top.

    ‘Putin will do what it takes to stay in power—not least since the consequences of his stepping down or being forced to step down are unforeseeable; they could very well lead to his imprisonment or death’, he writes.

    ‘If a quarter of a century has taught one thing about Putin, it is that he is a poor strategist and decision-maker. He is used to having his cake and eating it.’

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